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The European Left calls on European powers to
intervene in Lebanon
By Lucas Adler and Peter Schwarz
15 August 2006
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The Party of the European Left (EL) has appealed to the heads
of the European Union (EU) and European governments to play a
more active role in the present conflict in the Middle East.
In a statement adopted August 1 by the EL executive committee,
the organisation says it is bewildered by the weak, irresponsible
position of the EU and European governments with seats on the
UN Security Council, faced with the necessity to exert maximum
pressure on all parties to the conflict to agree to an immediate,
lasting peace that opens the way for a political solution to the
complex, interwoven conflicts in the Middle East.
The chairman of Germanys Left Party-Party of Democratic
Socialism (PDS), Lothar Bisky, immediately forwarded the statement
to Chancellor Angela Merkel (Christian Democratic UnionCDU)
and Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier (Social Democratic
PartySPD).
The EL statement calls upon EU institutions and the European
governments to press for an immediate ceasefire and a programme
of humanitarian aid under the auspices of the UN. The statement
concludes with a call for the establishment of a UN-controlled
buffer zone between Israel and Lebanon, the deployment
of an international peacekeeping force with a UN mandate
and an international conference to restart the peace process
in the Middle East. Furthermore, according to the statement,
the European governments should assist the Lebanese government
in disarming Hezbollah and press for the recognition of the Shebaa
farms region as Lebanese territory.
The statement underscores the role played by the Left Party-PDS
and their 14 sister parties in the European Left: they are not
a left-wing alternative to the established parties but instead
strive to provide a left fig leaf for the latters
politics.
On the one hand, they give verbal support to the increasing
opposition to the war in the Middle East and the constant series
of welfare cuts at home. On the other hand, they do everything
to deflect this opposition and steer it back within the framework
of official politics and prevent it from developing into a really
independent movement. Representatives of some of these parties,
like Italys Communist Refoundation (Rifondazione Comunista),
sit in the cabinet.
The idea that the European powers could play a role as peacemakers
in the Middle East is completely erroneous. The historical roots
of the present conflict and its underlying forces show unmistakably
that Europe is not a part of the solution, but is one of the causes
of the problem.
The present bombardment of Lebanon by the Israeli armysupplied
with the latest military hardware by the UScan only be understood
in the context of the decades of colonial subjugation of the entire
region, whose oil wealth has always made it of central strategic
importance for the imperialist powers. At first, it was Britain
and France that played the leading role; in the middle of the
last century, their place was taken by the US, whose rapacious
ambitions have reached a qualitatively new level with the conquest
of Iraq.
The Iraq invasion was launched on the basis of lies and was
aimed at securing the supremacy of the US in the region. The occupation
has become a debacle, and the Bush administration has reacted
by preparing for further aggression against Iran and Syria. To
this end, it unleashed its Israeli guard dog against Lebanon.
The destruction of Lebanons infrastructure and the terrorising
of the Shiite population are aimed at transforming the small nation
into a pliant instrument of the imperialist powers and suppressing
all potential opposition to American aggression.
The present war has been planned and prepared for a long time.
It has taken place with the full agreement and support of the
US and Britain. The abduction of two Israeli soldiers by Hezbollah,
which was seeking to exchange them for several thousand prisoners
held illegally in Israel, merely supplied the welcome pretext.
Stripped of its rhetoric about peace, the statement by the
EL essentially underscores the need for European imperialism to
defend its own interests in the Middle East, and to exert influence
on the US and Israel without genuinely opposing them.
The call for an international peacekeeping force clearly underscores
this. Under the present circumstances, such a forcewhich
the US, the EU and Israel all favourwould have the task
of consolidating the territory gained by the Israeli aggression.
Such a force would be stationed in southern Lebanon to prevent
the re-emergence of opposition to Israel and the US. It would
free up the US to launch further provocations against Syria and
Iran. Its mission could be compared to that of the International
Security Assistance Force (ISAF) troops in Afghanistan, who keep
the puppet regime of Hamid Karzai in power, meanwhile freeing
up the US for its military deployment in Iraq.
A basic condition for any peace in the Middle East is the withdrawal
of all imperialist troops from the region, and above all the removal
of American forces from Iraq. Rather than calling for such a withdrawal,
however, the European lefts are demanding the dispatch of additional
troops.
The Left Party-PDS support for the EL statement also shows
what should be made of its claim to reject all international military
missions by Germanys armed forces. From the call for an
international peacekeeping force, it is just a small step to supporting
the deployment of German soldiers in Lebanon, about which there
are already heated debates in the media. The Left Party-PDS would
find it difficult to reject German participation in a military
operation they had previously been noisily urging in the Bundestag
(parliament).
They are quite conscious of the true character of such military
operations. On the occasion of Bushs visit to Stralsund,
Tobias Pflüger, a Left Party-PDS deputy in the European parliament,
explained recently: In the shadow of the USAs imperial
policies, the EU is also seeking to become an imperial world military
power. The EU is copying the errors of American policy. In the
meantime, 19 so-called EU Battle Groups, the elite combat troops
of the European Union, will stand ready from January 1, 2007,
for deployment worldwide. In addition, there is an EU strike force
of 60,000 soldiers. The EU is stepping up its military capacity
and we are paying the price, in the truest sense of the word.
The Left Party-PDS pins its hopes on the European governments
being able to put pressure on the US to change its course. A statement
by its Bundestag faction says, Above all, it is a matter
of urging the US administration to use its influence on the government
of Israel to break off military operations and take up negotiations.
Oskar Lafontaine, who leads the Bundestag faction of the Left
Party together with Gregor Gysi, expresses the same sentiments.
In an interview with the Deutsch Welle radio station, Lafontaine
praised the German governments foreign policy, merely accusing
it of standing too close to Washington. Naturally, the government
strives to make its contribution to defuse the conflict,
he claimed, but it is always in dangerand this is
our criticismof relying too strongly on American policy.
And this in a situation in which the European governments,
and above all, Berlin, display on a daily basis their subordination
to the aggressive military policy of the US and Israel in the
Middle East! While France and Germany discreetly opposed the invasion
of Iraq, there is not a serious word of criticism about the Israeli
attack on Lebanon to be heard from either Paris or Berlin.
France, which as a former colonial power in Lebanon has substantial
economic interests, has long been co-operating with the US to
eliminate Syrias influence over the country. It regards
the present war as an opportunity to gain a foothold in the region
by placing its own troops there. Germany works as a mediator
to overcome the resistance of the Lebanese government to an American-French
UN resolution that would virtually turn the country into a protectorate
of the great powers.
The aggressive actions in the region being undertaken by Washington
and Tel Aviv make it unmistakably clear that they will not be
deflected from their political goals, either by international
agreements or by pressure from the other powers. They regard the
deployment of large-scale military might as a legitimate means
of pursuing their political interests. The European governments
have reacted to developments with a policy of appeasement, uncritically
accepting all the lies used to justify the war in Lebanon, and
unreservedly lined up behind the US. By accepting and even justifying
the open break with international law, the European governments
have demonstrated that the latter no longer has any significance
in their eyes either.
Only an independent movement of the international working class
on the basis of a socialist perspective offers a progressive way
out of the crisis in the Middle East. There exists no other political
force in the world that can fulfill this task.
The fight against war is inseparably linked to the defence
of social gains and democratic rights. The internal contradictions
of capitalism, and above all the contradiction between world economy
and the nation-state system, have removed the basis for a policy
of social reformism and are intensifying international tensions,
once again confronting mankind with the barbarism of imperialist
war.
The great powers are no more prepared to accept international
agreements and treaties when their imperialist interests are at
stake than they are the welfare-state provisions established after
World War II to guarantee the social peace and which today are
under attack everywhere.
In this context, the Left Party-PDS is seeking to prevent the
growth of an independent movement of the working class at any
price. Within Germany, it endeavours to encourage new illusions
in social reformism and direct the mounting protest into harmless
channels. In foreign policy, its only answer to the crisis in
the Middle East is to direct its appeals and demands towards the
European governments.
See Also:
Manoeuvres and appeasement: Europe's
response to the US-Israeli war against Lebanon
[3 August 2006]
What way forward in the struggle against
war?
[2 August 2006]
Rome conference on Lebanon
Appeasement 2006: Europe capitulates to American-Israeli aggression
[27 July 2006]
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